I was wondering if anyone knew if the Super Nintendo mouse works with the Atari Collection 1 cart - it contains Asteroids, Battlezone, Centiipede, Missile Command, Super Breakout and Tempest. Some of those games, especially Super Breakout, Missile Command, Tempest and maybe Centipede would benefit from a more precise control scheme like a mouse. Just wondering if anyone can confirm if actually works with this game before I both hunting down a mouse.

Wikipedia doesn't mention it but hey, its wikipedia and by the articles own admission, the game list mentioned is not exhaustive.

Not to mention some of the games listed on the Wikipedia page are actually *not* compatible with the mouse, heh. I'd check for you, but I only have the Williams collection, unfortunately. I should have snagged that Atari compilation I saw a few days back just for a few bucks..

Not sure what you mean by "get Tempest on the SNES version", its part of the six games on this Atari Collection 1 cart. It plays pretty good with the snes gamepad but it still would be better with a paddle style controller though. I was just wondering if the SNES mouse would work. Super Breakout really suffers and is almost unplayable with a digital gamepad but Tempest is still playable and quite enjoyable.

If I were you I'd just get a copy of Mario Paint with the mouse either way. It's really fun to swat those flies with the mouse in that minigame and see how many times you can get through it. It gets harder every time.

And oh yeah, duh I could find out for you if I had time. I have a mouse and the SNES powerpak.

Sega decided to hop on the arcade nostalgia wagon and released Arcade Classics for the Genesis, a collection featuring Centipede, Missile Command and Pong. Since the rights to those games were already taken, Midway was unable to release their Atari compilation for the Genesis.

Sadly, Sega's ports of the games aren't as good, even with the optional graphical enhancements they offer.

I forgot this collection had Centipede. Such a shame that it lacks mouse support.

I was about to jump in and say that I bet it was the fact that Sega had all but abandoned the Genesis by that point as the reason why it wasn't released on this system. But I see this Sega developed compilation was released in 1996. I assumed by how poor I remember that release being that it must've been done early in the life of the Genesis, not near the end.

I was about to jump in and say that I bet it was the fact that Sega had all but abandoned the Genesis by that point as the reason why it wasn't released on this system. But I see this Sega developed compilation was released in 1996. I assumed by how poor I remember that release being that it must've been done early in the life of the Genesis, not near the end.

Maybe, but it's also possible Sega just wanted to a make a quick buck without too much effort.

Here's some fuel for the debate: Sega released a similar compilation for the Master System in 1992 called Arcade Smash Hits, and then also released Arcade Classics for the Game Gear in 1996, the same year they released the Genesis collection. All three collections have Centipede and Missile Command, but the consoles got Pong while the Game Gear got Breakout as the third title.

So, regardless of whether the Genesis collection was coded in 1992 or 1996, it seems likely Sega had the rights secured to those games for their cartridge-based systems long before Midway planned their collection. But Sega either licensed them only for those specific consoles, or only secured rights for "cartridges" and not "discs"*, allowing Midway to release the games on the Sega Saturn.

But, the result is the same any which way: Blame Sega.

* Lawyers love to create licenses for each little thing, which is why there are two different versions of Frogger on the 2600, two different versions of Zaxxon on the C-64, and so forth.

Here's some fuel for the debate: Sega released a similar compilation for the Master System in 1992 called Arcade Smash Hits, and then also released Arcade Classics for the Game Gear in 1996, the same year they released the Genesis collection. All three collections have Centipede and Missile Command, but the consoles got Pong while the Game Gear got Breakout as the third title.

The Game Gear version actually has Pong on it, too. In fact, it's Ultrapong. I have the GG version of this compilation, so I went and dug it out to double-check. Haven't seen the Genesis version of the game. The SMS version has Breakout on it, though.

The Game Gear version actually has Pong on it, too. In fact, it's Ultrapong. I have the GG version of this compilation, so I went and dug it out to double-check. Haven't seen the Genesis version of the game. The SMS version has Breakout on it, though.

The Game Gear version actually has Pong on it, too. In fact, it's Ultrapong. I have the GG version of this compilation, so I went and dug it out to double-check. Haven't seen the Genesis version of the game. The SMS version has Breakout on it, though.

I just bought a Copy on ebay, for $10...don't know if the price going to go up or not...

Again, it's much less common than the Williams collection. You typically only see one or two copies on eBay at a time. The price will naturally be slightly higher.

Maybe so, but again it's demand that matters. With this game also available on Playstation and Saturn, I don't see its demand climbing very much. Especially when Saturn has the best official arcade stick of these systems.